Three new bilateral agreements signed with Central American nations are reshaping the city's migrant processing landscape, with community leaders reporting their busiest week in over a year.
As construction accelerates on the long-awaited Line 7 expansion, communities from La Florida to Maipú are preparing for both disruption and transformation.
As the capital faces mounting pressure to cut emissions by 2030, officials outline ambitious plans while researchers warn implementation remains the critical challenge.
What began as a grassroots response to economic inequality has transformed one of the capital's most overlooked districts into a model for community-led urban renewal.
As property values soar and affordable housing evaporates, city planners face pivotal choices on densification, rent control, and green space that will define Santiago's next decade.
A decade of policy missteps and market forces has left the city's poorest neighbourhoods in crisis—and reshaped the political landscape heading into municipal elections.
As the capital moves forward with ambitious sustainability targets, municipal leaders face pivotal choices on public transport, water management, and green zoning that will reshape neighbourhoods from Providencia to La Florida.
A spike in reported crime and traffic accidents across the capital has stretched resources, prompting officials to review dispatch protocols ahead of the July holiday period.
This week's landmark zoning decision reshapes development rules across Ñuñoa and Providencia, intensifying debate over affordability versus urban sprawl.
While cities worldwide struggle with fragmented safety approaches, Santiago's integrated junta de vecinos system is emerging as a blueprint for grassroots urban security.
From a regional hub to a global destination, Santiago's transformation into one of Latin America's most diverse cities reflects decades of economic shifts, political upheaval, and strategic policy decisions.
As construction accelerates toward the Mapocho River crossing, commuters and small business owners in La Reina and Ñuñoa are preparing for years of disruption—but banking on long-term gains that could reshape their neighbourhoods.
As commuters face mounting delays on the Línea 6 extension, municipal leaders and infrastructure analysts weigh in on the controversial project's future.